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By C. E. Bryant
Meet Some Baptists in Washington A 29-year-old, serious-faced fellow wearing dark-rimmed glasses-name of Bill Moyers-was seen on television screens all over America the evening of that fateful day last November when the nation changed Presidents. He walked so closely beside President Lyndon B. Johnson you may have thought he was a bodyguard. But his continued conversation with the President, as Mr. Johnson prepared to speak into radio micro-phones his first official words to the nation, indicated that Moyers was a confidant rather than a Secret Service man. Obviously, the President leaned heavily on him in this time of extreme tension. Moyers, a Baptist, has been one of the President's right-hand men ever since that hour. It was almost a month after the assassination of President Kennedy before Moyers was free to go to his home in Alexandria. Mr. Johnson had insisted that he stay with him at the Johnson home and then at the White House, day and night, while g

By C. E. Bryant
Meet Some Baptists in Washington A 29-year-old, serious-faced fellow wearing dark-rimmed glasses-name of Bill Moyers-was seen on television screens all over America the evening of that fateful day last November when the nation changed Presidents. He walked so closely beside President Lyndon B. Johnson you may have thought he was a bodyguard. But his continued conversation with the President, as Mr. Johnson prepared to speak into radio micro-phones his first official words to the nation, indicated that Moyers was a confidant rather than a Secret Service man. Obviously, the President leaned heavily on him in this time of extreme tension. Moyers, a Baptist, has been one of the President's right-hand men ever since that hour. It was almost a month after the assassination of President Kennedy before Moyers was free to go to his home in Alexandria. Mr. Johnson had insisted that he stay with him at the Johnson home and then at the White House, day and night, while g